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  • AOL

    Nest's $229 video doorbell is a useful addition to its ecosystem

    by 
    Nicole Lee
    Nicole Lee
    03.15.2018

    Last September, Nest introduced several products to its connected home lineup: the Nest Secure home security system, the Nest Cam IQ Outdoor and the Nest Hello video doorbell. While both the Secure and the IQ outdoor cam have been out for a few months, the Hello had not come to market yet. That is, until now. Both the Hello and the previously-announced Nest x Yale Lock are now officially available for $229 and $249 respectively. Oh, and Nest is introducing something today as well: the Nest Temperature Sensor.

  • AOL, Roberto Baldwin

    Nest adds Google Assistant to the indoor Cam IQ

    by 
    Swapna Krishna
    Swapna Krishna
    02.21.2018

    The Nest Cam IQ is the smartest camera in the company's security-oriented lineup, and now it's even smarter. Today, Nest announced that the Cam IQ natively supports Google Assistant, thanks to an over-the-air update. It's important to note, though, that this is only for the indoor version of the Cam IQ.

  • Nest

    Nest's outdoor Cam IQ brings facial recognition to your backyard

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    09.20.2017

    Nest's latest media event could be big news if you're interested in spotting burglars before they break into your home. It's introducing the Nest Cam IQ outdoor, a rugged take on the regular IQ that's designed to watch over your yard. As you might guess, it applies the same facial recognition technology to a weather-resistant (IP66-rated) and tamper-resistant body that's always plugged in. In theory, it won't raise an alert if it sees your kids playing in the back, or a locked-out spouse frantically looking for a way in. The camera can automatically zoom in and follow people as well. And the speaker is 15 times louder than on the indoor model, so you can shout at trespassers if you catch them in the act.

  • AOL, Roberto Baldwin

    Nest’s overpriced IQ camera highlights the faults of facial recognition

    by 
    Roberto Baldwin
    Roberto Baldwin
    07.19.2017

    Nest burst onto the scene with a thermostat that was easy to use, had a slick interface, came with actual smart features and didn't look like someone just taped an off-white box to your wall. It followed that up with a less exciting but possibly more important smoke-and-carbon-monoxide detector. Then instead of building its own camera, it bought Dropcam, changed the name, added some cloud features and tada, the Nest Cam.

  • Nest

    Nest’s new camera is smart enough to know who’s who

    by 
    Jamie Rigg
    Jamie Rigg
    05.31.2017

    After acquiring Dropcam back in 2014, Nest waited another year to launch its own home monitoring camera. It wasn't much of an improvement over the old Dropcam Pro, and aside from releasing an outdoor version with weatherproof body, Nest has focused on improving its software ever since. But now the smart home company is back with a second-gen connected camera -- the Nest Cam IQ -- which features serious upgrades in the hardware department and an inflated price tag to match.